The tools and resources contained in ASIC's Be MoneySmart resource can also be used in non-accredited general
money management skills programs.
The online modules can also be used as part of non-accredited training for general
money management skills programs.
Not exact matches
More than half (57 percent) of Girl Scout alumnae in business fields credit the Girl Scout Cookie
Program ® with developing
skills they use today, including
money management, goal setting, and public speaking.
Through the Girl Scout Cookie
Program, girls learn five essential life
skills: goal setting, decision making,
money management, people
skills, and business ethics.
EPA Student and Teacher Resources Risk
Management Game Decision Making Game Teaching
Money Management Skills to 6 - 12 graders Federal Spending & Budget Exercises Red Cross «Masters of Disaster» Hydroville Curriculum Project (Problem - Based Environmental Health Curricula) K - 12 Teaching Tools from the National Fire Protection Association NFPA Games and Safety Tips «NEED» — The National Energy Education and Development Project US Government Air Quality Education Agritourism — Safety on Farm Field Trips, Farm Animal Safety Positive Behavioral Interventions & Supports Maryland PBIS Common Sense Media Information on Cyberbullying Home of the Olweus Bullying Prevention
Program Safe and Supportive Schools Take the Pledge to Stop Bullying Tolerance.org StopBullying.gov
In addition to specific youth - based products and services, we have established financial literacy and student credit union
programs in area schools to teach important
money management skills before graduation.
Once you've successfully completed the
Program, your credit will begin to improve and you'll be armed with better
money management skills.
You ought to be aware of credit counseling agencies and organizations that charge a high up - front or every month fee for signing up for credit counseling or a debt
management plan, pressure you to make voluntary contributions or use another name for fees, send you free pamphlets contained with information about the services they provide without requiring you to provide personal financial information such as charge account numbers with balances, try to enroll you in a debt
management plan without spending the time to review your current financial situation, offer to sign you up for a debt
management plan without trying to help you with budgeting and
money management skills, or require that you make payments into a debt
management plan before your current creditors have accepted you into the
program.